A scene along Popes Creek, 200 feet from the birthplace borne of
George Washington.

"A place of rose and thyme and scented earth,
A place the world forgot,
But here a matchless flower came to birth
Time paused and blessed the spot."

Inscription on the sundial in the
herb garden, Washington's Birthplace.

THE STORY OF THE Washington family plantation in
Westmoreland County, Va., where George Washington was born on February
22, 1732, may be divided into 3 main parts. The first relates to the
activities of the early Washingtons who lived on the plantation during
the latter third of the 17th century and fourscore years of the 18th
centurya period covering 115 years. During that time the
plantation between Bridges Creek and Popes Creek grew; successive
members of the Washington family became prosperous planters, acquired
large landholdings, and attained important civic and political offices
in their county and colony. The climactic year of this first period was
1732the 6th year in the reign of King George II and the 125th year
in the history of the colonywhen George, the son of Augustine and
Mary Ball Washington, was born. The period ends during the American
Revolution when the home in which George first saw the light of day
accidentally caught fire, burned to the ground, and was abandoned as a
homesite.

The second period spans a hundred yearsa
century when the birthplace site was neglected, and was all but
forgotten by a growing nation which showed little or no interest in
preserving the birthplace of its great military leader and first
president. Wild honeysuckle and bramble thickets covered the foundations
of the burned home; the place was forgotten for so many years that
knowledge of the exact location and use of many of the plantation
buildings became lost.

The third and last period of the story covers the
years when the Federal Government, various individuals, and patriotic
organizations became interested in preserving the historic site; a
period culminating in the preservation of the ancient plantation by the
Wakefield National Memorial Association and the United States
Government.